U.S. Supreme Court to examine birthright citizenship Wednesday
The Supreme Court reviews the constitutional limits of birthright citizenship under the 14th Amendment amid challenges to President Trump's 2025 order excluding some children born in the U.S.
- The Supreme Court heard arguments Wednesday in Trump versus Barbara, a case challenging President Donald Trump's executive order denying birthright citizenship to children born in the United States to parents lacking permission to be present.
- At issue is the Amendment, which conferred citizenship to freed African Americans after the Civil War; justices must reconcile this with precedent in Wong Kim Ark, where the court affirmed citizenship for children of Chinese parents.
- Iowa Attorney General representative Eric Wessan argued the Amendment was not intended to reward illegal re-entry, noting English common law granted protections only to those with permission to be present in the United States.
- Lawyers opposing the order warned of chaos if individual states adopt varying citizenship policies, questioning whether the three categories of exclusion from birthright citizenship are exhaustive or if other groups might also be excluded.
- A decision is expected by late June or early July; the Amendment remains the bedrock for immigration law, and this ruling will determine who the United States can extend birthright citizenship to.
29 Articles
29 Articles
Trump 'has never been more toxic' to the Supreme Court as ruling looms: analysis
Donald Trump and the Supreme Court's relationship has worsened again as the president wades in on the birthright citizenship case, an analyst has claimed. The president had signed an executive order on January 20, 2025, that would strip certain babies born in the United States of their citizenship. This executive order has been challenged by the Supreme Court and is set to be assessed on Wednesday. The relationship between Trump and the Supreme …
Supreme Court Set to Hear Landmark Case That Could End Birthright Citizenship Loophole and Cripple Anchor Baby Industry
The Supreme Court is scheduled to hear oral arguments next week in a constitutional showdown over President Donald Trump’s executive order that would end automatic birthright citizenship for children born in the United States to illegal aliens or parents on temporary visas.
Trump Fumes As Justices Take Up Next Big Case
“President Trump’s relationship with the Supreme Court has never been more toxic. Now, it risks getting worse,” the Wall Street Journal reports. “After the court’s rejection of Trump’s tariffs provoked a new level of hostility from the president, the justices are set to consider a pillar of his immigration crackdown: limiting U.S. citizenship. Trump seems to be bracing for defeat.” “The case, which will be argued Wednesday, tests Trump’s attempt…
How does Supreme Court birthright citizenship review proceed?
What the Supreme Court is set to decide The Supreme Court is preparing to review whether an executive order ending birthright citizenship is constitutional—specifically, who qualifies as an American citizen. The legal dispute Birthright citizenship is rooted in constitutional principles and long…
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